The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 180, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 3, 1923 Page: 4 of 6
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whjs? jwernlo
ttt.oiullca 4ui) « ta»4.
■ROWNSVILLE herald publishing
%__ COM PAN Y.
Entered ns second-class matter in the
mt Brownsville Texas.
MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
y*« Associated Press is exclusively
Sntitltd to the use for republicstion of
•11 news dispatches credited to it or not
otherwise credited in this paper and
also the local news published herein.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Daily and Sunday (7 Issues)
Ona year (in advance).$7.00
Si* months (in advsnce)... ...... 3.76
On# month (in advance)....76
The Sunday Herald
On* year (in advance).$2.00
fid* months (in advance). 1.25
Thtw« months (in advance).76
Subscribers in the City of Brownsvills
*"« fail to receive THE HERALD regu
larly are requested to notify the office
promptly. Telephone No. 7. Now sub-
scribers should receive their first pnp^r
*°t later than the second day after the
order ia in the office of THE HERALD
Every subscriber even in the most dis-
*vctions of the city should receive
hia daily paper not later than 6 p. m.
and his Sunday pnper by 7 a. m.
Checks should be msde payable to The
Brownsville Herald Publishing Company.
Business communications should be ad-
dressed to the company and items let-
ters etc. intended for publication should
be addressed to the Editor. The Herald.
Brownsville. Texas. Letters intended
•^ Publication should be signed with the
full name of the writer. The name will
not bo printed if not desired but it will
be considered an evidence of good faith
on part of the writer.
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the
character standing or reputation of any
person firm or corporation which may
appear in the columns of The Herald
will be gladly corrected upon its being
brought to the attention of the pub-
lishers.
Wednesday Tan. 3 1(>23.1
THAT HIDALGO COUNTY
MAIN HIGHWAY
Residents of Hidalgo county will
fully appreciate their paved highway
when it is completed. The main
highway in Hidalgo county—wr at
least that section of it from the Cam-
eron county lint* through Mercedes
to Weslaco—has evidently been mod-
eled upon the same pattern as “The
Roeky Road to Dublin."
The Herald does not wish to he
unduly critical but we are at a loss
to understand why the residents of
Hidalgo county permit such road
conditions. The volume of traffic
between the many thriving towns and
comaiunities in that part of Hidalgo
county is sufficient to warrant the
propej maintenance of the highway.
Hundreds of automobiles and trucks
daily “snake" their way around or
over the bumps and any driver who
has sufficient hardihood to attempt
to drive his automobile at a mod-
erate speed is almost assured of a
broken soring or some other car
casualty before reaching the end of
his tourney.
There was a time when the grade
roads of Cameron county were in sim-
ilar condition but that time has
passed. There is not a graded road
in this county with the exception of
those now being improved that i« in
such deplorable condition as fhe
main highway of Hidalgo county.
Every tourist arriving in Browns-
ville from the north comments upon
the condition of that road and the
entire Valley is receiving much ad-
vertising of a decidedly uncompli-
mentary nature as a result of Hi-
dalgo’s failure to properly maintain
the highway that connects its prin-
cipal towns.
THE ROAD TO POINT ISABEL
The county commissioners' court
yesterday decided to construct the
i».8 miles of highway connecting Los
Fresnos with the Brownsville- Point
Isabel road thereby given the res. j
idents of the northern part of the'
Valiev direct highway connections
with the Valley’s future seaport. This
will be the first grade road construc-
tion in the county’s 1923 pro«rram.
Trie northern part of the \ alley ]
has lon«* demanded more direct con* |
ncctions with Point Isabel and the
announcement that the commission-
ers* court has decided to construct
this road thereby making a straight
road from Barreda to the Point Isa- ]
hel highway will give general satis-
faction throughout the Valley.
The opening of the port at Point I
Isabel will mean a tremendous in- j
crease in the traffic between that
place and the northern towns and
communities of the Valley and the
prediction has heen made that before
many years this highway will also
have to he paved to accommodate
the traffic it will be called upon to
bear. Within n few vears after the
opening of the port Point Isabel will
be the principal shipping point of the
Valley and truck and automobile
traffic to that point will develop ra-
pidly and ultimately make a paved
highway a necessity.
Every’ member of the legislature is
now talking economy’—and it is to
be honed they will hold the same
view throughout the session. There
are hundreds of demands for appro-
priations and it will require much
thought and consideration to separ-
ate the necessary from the unneces-
sary. Education and highways will
demand the heaviest toll upon the
state treasury and in these the legis-
lature should be generous hut on
other apnropriations the members
will not be as free-handed as in for-
mer years. _
Cotton will be king in the Valley
this venr. A Weslaco farmer was
the fir't in the field and already ha'
100 acres planted and will take a
chance on frosts. Within a few weeks
thousands of Valley farmers will h<'
planting the largest acreage of cot-
ton ever planted in the Valley ami
if the acreage production equals that
of 1022 the Valley will produce ap-
proximately 1 fit)000 hales this year.
The Lower Rio Grande Valley was
the only section of Texas that pro-
duced a "bumper crop" last year ac-
cording to the crop maps of the state
Department of Agriculture and if the
Valley farmers duplicate the record
this year the financial problem of the
Valley will he solved.
The statisticians have had their in-
ning this week and the majority of
them have proved hv their figure/
that prosperity has come home tn
roost indefinitely. The old saying
"figures never lie" occasionally
proves a fallacy but as the statisti-
cians* figures are of the optimistic
variety the people are inclined to ac-
cept them as they should at their
full value.
The Department of Agriculture ha*
issued a four-colored poster announ-
cing that the “eating of meat is
healthful" the object being to stim-
ulate the live stock industry. Why
not issue another announcing that
the eating of vegetables is also
heatlhy and assist the Rio Grande
Valley truck growers in creating a
greater demand for their products?
The New Year’s celebration in
many of the northern cities was a
very hilarious event according to
press reports. Judging from the
number of arrests made for drunk-
enness the supply of bootleg and
moonshine must have diminshed to
quite an extent.
Some men are born pessimists. An
Indiana editor says: “The record of
100 marriage licenses from Saturday-
morning until Tuesday night indi-
cates extra work for the divorce
courts.”
There is a huge fortune awaiting
the man who invents a set of un-
breakable New Year’s resolutions.
Other Papers
GIVES Bl'SI NESS TO EMPLOYES
(Galveston News >
The country will await with keen in-
terest the outcome of the venture in
New York whereby Henry A. I»ix. a
clothing manufacturer has turned over
to h’s employes his entire business val-
ued at *1.000.000. Along with this gift
Mr. I>ix offers to help his employes
run the business if they wish.
It is not the first time the co-opera
five plan of running a business ha*
been tried. But. if it succeeds it will
be the first time it has succeeded. It is
a dream of the oeialists. and in the
years past when socialism was less un-
derstood and therefore flatly rejected
the leaders dwelt extensively on the co-
operative plan for industry.
The plan has been tried by wage
earner- who acquired property and un-
de r toe k to run it. It has been tried by
a nwmill concern in Arkansas where
it proved a flat failure. In that instance
the employes were permitted to parti-
cipate in the profits. The camtal inves-
ted was given its share and the work-
ers divided the rest among themselves
it worked very well when there were
profits to be divided but when a lean
year came along and there were no
profits the profit sharing employe-
slipped away and went to work where
wages were fixed and certain.
In the present instance we will like-
ly find the clothing factory running
sweeily for awhile. Then some of the
employes will become di-sati.-fied and
ell the*r interest to others who are
more thrifty. Kverttually these thrifty
and more intelligent ones will acquire
a control of the slink and gradually
they will succeed to the ownership and
become what the socialists rail “capi-
talists.” The present “capitalistic sys-
tem." a- the socialists call it. is not de-
signed by capitalists it i- th- natural
adjustment which follows in the wake
of industry. Divide all the property in
the world equally and in a very short
while it would be back in the bands of
the thrifty th vvi and the indus-
trious while the shiftless ignorant
and irresponsible ones would he work-
ing for the others.
FEWER NEWSPAPERS
f Indianopolis News.)
According to the census report* of
the federal department of commerce
there ha- been in the la«t few year* an
increase in the number of newspaper
readers in this country but a decrease
in the number of newspaper*. These re-
ports which cover the decade ending in
1919 show that during that period th<
total circulation of daily newspapers in
the United State.* increased from 21.-
211977 to 3<i02H/>30 while the numhet
of newspapers decreased from 2.fi<Mi to
2.441. The decrease in number was gen-
eral being in about the same propor-
tion in the new -late* like Oklahoma
as in older states like Indiana where
the decrease was from 71X to 550 in-
cluding weekly semi-weekly and daily
newspapers.
The effect of the war upon the panel
supply and the high pi ices which dur-
ing the war period forced some news-
| papers to suspend publication may have
i Hastened this tendency. But the statis-
tics for 1914. ns compared wih 1999 and
1919 show that the number was stead-
ily decreasing at the time the war broke
i out. The increase in the number of
I readers was also pronounced before the
; war. The report confirms the view that
newspaper readers in smaller communi-
ties are tending to depend upon larger
' newspapers for their pews. State capi-
tal and county seat newspaper* have
invaded a field once covered almost cn-
tirely by town newspaper*.
The American preference for evening
new? paper* is shown by the report tt
he unchanged. In 1919 there wm
I 1721 daily evening newspapers in th<
country and 720 daily moraine new -
j papers. The total daily evening eircula
THE RELAPSE
EDWARP!
I HAVE HERE A UST Or
A FEW of The Things
You 5 a ip i Could ge”
AFTeR CURISTmas- 1
Lf SHELL olT/ J
. >
LEG IS LA TIVE CA MPA IGN
WILL BE LAUNCHED BY
TEXAS WOMENS CLUBS
*!•> 11m* Asmim |*r**N I
AI Sl'IN Texas Jan. Out the
inost a< »ive legislative campaigns in tin
j history nf IVxus women's eluJi> will or
I liiHin iinl wlifii iht- legislature louy-in"
• " ’H week i:n«I will t-ontitiiie throughout
iln. »essi in. at fttnliiig to members of tin
' j* >tit legislati ve count il of fit. t»f tin
hauling women's organmi:ions of ’lie
state.
lint a few ineasiirrs will In- prrseutc<|
| »n*l pushed hy the coum-il. it lt»s het-n
imlii nteil. "I'iit* measures for which tin
efforts .if the joint eolin. il vv ili lie «• sel l oil
liave Itetll agreetl t||M>n liy lepre-flita -ives
"I all of tin- orx’.iinzaiions. tine tf tin
j principal nifjisures to lie favnretl ytill
l>e an a. t to enable Texas to take full
i a.Ivantage of the provisions «.f .hi
Sheppanl Towner a* ♦ for tin- protect ion
•»f miiteinity anil infamy. whieh wa-
i passt il by imigress.
II.•* |e\a» wouieii's eitr's individually
have expressed tavor to tin proposed
emergency appropriation for Texas
'* Iiim'Is ami an extehsir.Im atioiial
. survey as well a - other measures al
j i hough i has not I teen announced tluit
i tin* eoum-il will support such uieasiir.'s.
<Questionnaires entering tin* principal
! -gi-iatmn ImurH by 11.«• council have
Im*»*Ii '••in !•> till t)>•* »>f iltt
l«**i • "Iil III t** :i' a !»»••■ -1* ii'lat urr mra'iiir
Slat* iiH-nt' from rami** is of tin **nf
• il show I hail th«‘ !**j^ i 'In I •»■ ' air*1 infft in;;
w ill laivor ill** •' -•{•••'ul' ' i]>|M>t i••«! If.
I In* woiiM-ii • lults.
M**i:it*i>|-' o! i In- ji.int |rj*is till IV** • ’ i; *
« il. v.itli tlai* <>!x-mi/ati *n Ihfv rrj»r«*s**tii
follow :
'll'. !.•••• .1* f|»h. San Antoni". |«r*--i
■If i.i . nth I Mrs. < liar!* ' i*. Itii.iifi. Tvlrr.
"f tin* I’f'.a' ! • •<l«*i ait:<• :i «f M oin* iiV
• Ini*'.
Alt' S. Al V Main-'. Aii'*i«. [*:«• i
• l»ni. am! 'I; .1 II. W.liiani on. Austin.
<>( ill** I f\;i' f<u'Vf's <i I’ari i;! 'IVarhrr
Aimm i 11 ion.
Mi - .1 f"if I *:inif! Anif'. * ioirji-tim n.
!>if'hlnit. ami .Mi . i»nvf l»«»oi'i. A i'tia
T* \ai.' I.fii” i« \\ <>nifn V ..trr- *
Mi'. <'i i n.f I**-\nnWir:». Austin.
I>if'ii| n». ami Mr* .!■»•« h nr Collin.'.
I i ’ ta* -. I < Mf \V« nifii-' •'ill i'll.m Tf.at-
! |irran« ■ I*nioii.
'it"- n "i ftn <• Saiinl'. 111111:1'. jit f'i
<li*nt am! A!i'. Al**< ia l’-i *wn l‘ti'« I a!!.
I*.ilia' liiiMlif" .hi ! I’i >.1'i-»ii:iI \Vo
"i'H ' fiiih*. Alt' A. N Al<< aiiuai. •»!
Aii'f in. is I'ni'laliVf '«‘«-r»*laiji of tin-
fonm il.
_—
New York Lettet
\T.\\ I • tllK. Jan. 11\ t|#‘ linn
jl uiiine I’ntli is a tnih grown up young
women. - lie ought to have enough silver- ’
"nrr to furnish an Now. at ilo
age of I till loon s |.o possesses 7MI tfo- i
pbies which s||«. ha* diptII!!-<i in xarioiis
horse 'hows since no was mx tears
• • •
Ii used to >oem liarI enough to have
1 l‘* tip ill* V.ait* Is. Now. \ve*Ve grown •
; a. on lolled to the |'a I l hat the taxi
•It iter expects his piece of * ilver just i
jits iniicli as a matter of course »> pull- *
man porter. Him the latest tipping ox
i poeiauot is adding a straw t** lunch. !
i’I hat's the so|M clerk. At neurit evert '
v«*ln fountain in the theater ilistri. i ‘
an.I a good many outside of that region J
j we an- beginning' to lean) that it's j
pretty poor serve e ton get utiles urn I
i treat flic I) belliud the tainter as a
j waiter rather than ii clerk.
• * *
Here is « sfyrt which ought to
counter-ai t evert worn out "mother ii
I law" joke that evert was printed. It‘»
lent indy true. Among mx friends are aj
young couple who have been married:
something le-s tiirii a * year and are
keeping house in an apartment here in
Manila)tan. I lie hrttlt * mother li\<
over in New .lei.set. So this is what
! the soil in law put in an envelope atm
[hung on the ('hrhtiua- tree for her:
an order on a leading hiur-drcsser toi
a laitoil peliiiniieiit wave a eoinmutu i
l tioii ticket and a ke> to their apart
: Uient! ’I lie mother told me alnuit it
when I was in to see them the otiict
du) oh. yea. she's using the key al
read) and I neter saw a hapier woman.
• in ton know I nevci had a permanent
wave in all my life before."* she sj4i |
"aud I do think it is becoming don't
j )uu: 1*111 ilie he) and the ticket !•
1 come and Use it I shall never he afraid
{ of mx standing with my sou in lav.
! again."
* • *
I never have seen many Juliets. Tin*
most pathetic of nil Shakespeare*** trnge
dies has not been cum led a great deal
sita e I became of I healer-going age.
lint 1 am not sorry. If there have been
ideas and ideals of the fair maid of
Verona different
tion was 20.415789. and the total daily
j morning circulation was 12582.811.
1 l»uring the ten-year period the ex’ening j
circulation gain was 40 percent and tin* j
! morning gain was ::i percent. The Mg
nificant fact is that the number of
; persons who feel obliged to keep in
i daily contact with the world through a
j newspaper is increasing materially a |
.circumstance which peak Well for the
^ intellect util alert in* * of the country.
•ortmy **«I l>i I I; li*-l l<arrymi>ri>. I am
lust ns glad not to ba\o liiis •■xi|iii»iif
m **t*|M‘*M ill loti lonrroil with <fnutuiat ion
| . I' ivii.it i urn of til l " ;iini:i Siiak*'
ivanii'i li<*i' tti *.ii. It isii’i a
;:iy. in••.s|.«nis lilt- Jiiln-i. ovoi. in tin
ariy si •*.. ihai Mis. liiimmori* givn*
0 oin*. it is a hivoly ••ivjturi of v«•:itli-
>ii «11*rrt11> a•><! youthful trngoily. always
>•!!*« I'Hi' < t tin- tnigfly hang* tig nu t
i**f Min] hot* lov«*r t»:n i ifi iiting i!n*n- in-ur
*1 lo\ a insiitiiatif.il tot whntovoi* tin
1 11 ill*** may !•<*. ’i in to is im |»iti*|Mis«
n ioToming out liiisiasiii ov« Kthol
Hairyinoro. I lor fahiit anti hot* i harm
in* loo niii.i t .ally :tooo|*tf**i for that;
•'it it is iliitn-nit t i»t lo tin h atu i
*ooiiig tilts now attfi r<uiittkaMo |»ro*iu>
i*»n ol • iComoo !it:i| .Intiot" lUt'il
"ylt «*y makos Mon-ntio ;i. human am!
a t • sistal»h* a figtiro as otto » att itnngim*.
I f it i it is | ii itajis lo* v t!l always in* known
i-itt* gnat Mon-ntio. i’.nt why ha* ilo
ollitlty no' ti; * i < * * • J liofor* that M* k;n
'Ionis i* a groat aolor? To soo him ti*
i in* ovktoi-oi in •• Uoso I *..*r in I" ami llton
in tin* iitfinito tomiontoss au<| liio-to-s*
>t s|»tt it ol lioitn o a |-«<\chit ion.
• * •
'V otiioti <lo talk tiiofo titan inon: it isn't
in si it s| j.t-s| it ion; a<- onlint t<» I »r. A.
A. Mi ill. j*syi hol'igisi of .Ww ^ rk
I tiivoisiiy. Ilmi'inft* In* o\|iliiin.s why
'hoy iio ft. Stm i* ilo* lo ginniii^ of linn*
St* s | »r |’.t ill mon li.tvo !iinl Htofo work
_ _ _ ____ _ _
t*> do than woiiM-n. That nee*! in work |
ha» tightened their tongues until it is
more difficult for them to chatter than !
lor women whose leisure has been great-
Moreover he »:i\s. u considerable
of every Woman's life |c>s always
been spent in teaebing babies talk
and if is therefore natural t" her to
spend energy in that war.
• • •
Huge a- lf»e Iluu-odcome is. it v.as
forced to turn away < rowd* from it*
doors the oilier dir dining the funeral I
serv:ee% of Amy Stone the original'
"I.if tie Kva" of "| u le Tom's t'abin."
'I be sery i-< - were held under the atts-
pi* ■•- cf ilie Actoi’s K ind of Ameriea
Mr*. Slone win was years o'd. wa
piibuldy one of the best known .-p-tresses
of a generation ago.
t.tv\ hawk iMtiri:
— ■ — — ——
Tom Sims Says
I adieu I irsi" is the men's slogan 1
"hen i’ i* di*hw"shiug time.
1‘athing ..ften >- dangerous. In
i oiiisrille. K' a man slipped on the*
soap and broke bis arm.
A «'in« itiiu*t r i man w in* expected a
s* i eel ear to detour around his auto
will r«*i-over. doctors tl ink.
I hinkii.g you ktmyy is never a- im
poriant a' know ing' yoti think.
'"deep is n great tiling li keeps some
people 11 on cussing the government 1
-4 hoars a day.
Money is not very important unless |
you bayen'i an;.
■•’*oiii Worry" makes n better motto
when you mid **I);hers "
I in- most daiigei-'Mis w >r»l in this Ian-I
SUaae of ouis js "y-s."
I lie minor ti nt Heritinuy is eollansitig
is four \e-i»s old now.
"*ilh If million oifo r tilings to hope I
• *o «i me sfill ms: t o*| hoping the c\-
kiiiser** xx if•• brats him.
A traveler te|!s li s lie ■ yg‘| »loe;i
•it home unless they roil; the bed :tid
jthrow cinders in his f.*ne
I*.. of the hour is "|s that
dame dock light?"
'I his world seem* Worse than it is
l.e.ai se you never hear mndi about the I
| bad things i**1*t don't happen.
Sian-i on your own rights and you
•“itt’t i»e tohl where to gel off.
’Kite best nation in the world is es-|
pin tuition.
.lust to I... the first f.r |;i_\; %v.. s:t>
| “Simp Karly."
■—1 .. ♦♦ - — —
BOY ATTEMPTS RESCUE
i BRAIN'A lilt. Minn. .Fan. d. Wil*
: * eft Itikkie. sj\ years oltl yyji* droyy l|e*l j
! :n ilie Mississippi river lore today when!
lo- ;t':- nipte.| t-t sjn . ids brother. Tuvin
Id' years old.
Toy io was rescued after i iingin- t-
I he ice for I'll iiiitiutcs.
•“ ^ d^zs
j TURNVK. AT MAJN AMD MARKET STREET'S OtO AENE^AL
I 'HAI C.AIHINC SPEED SO RAPiDLT THAT IT SEEMED ORLY
1 atCOMDf. UrtTU. AUNT SARAH Pt ABOOYS TREASURED WO-'
\ OF PM? tOM T \N«JLD bfc DASHED TD PA CES AGAMVl s<x4t* STORE HH#«T y
EAGLE PASS LUMBER CO.
Builders’ Supplies — Farm Machines
JUST RECEIVED: TARGET SPRAY—SCALE DESTROYER
Monroe Street— Fronting Court House
Prescriptions
We fill yo-ir prescription* ju*t •» writ-
ten by your physician. Our prescrip-
tion department is in charge of com-
petent pharmaci* t». Our service *•
prompt. V/c deliver.
WILLMAN’S PHARMACY
Telephone 40
m. as a a a a m aa a aa A A a
f-
-THE-
Merchants National Bank
OF BROWNSVILLE TEXAS
Respectfully Solicits Your Patronage
Capital and Surplus Over $350000.00
L __
The State National Bank
Brownsville Texas
Capital $109000.00 Surplus $20CC9Gfl
We Solicit Your Account
BE PREPARED i
A thoughtful analysis of present day conditions mult convince yntt
that a savings account opened with the First National Bank i* tHs
safest way to have money when the nerd demands.
Could we impress upon each individual the importance of this ad-
monition— millions would be saved.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK I
OF BROWNSVILLE ]
m
HOUSES and LOTS
SOLD ON TERMS
LATEST SELECTION OF
CHOICE LOTS IN THE I
CITY OF BROWNSVILLE I
H. L. FITCH |
Remember - Filch Bu»lt is Well j
~ i :L.J- UJ L-S .1^: l_J J l H W
START THAT FORD RIGHT NOW!
DON’T WASTE YOUR TIME. TEMPER AND ENLRGY
CRANKING THAT FORD EVERY TIME YOU WANT [
TO USL THE CAR. INSTALL A—
Ford Magneto Adjuster
—and end all your Engine Troubles
Corrects end-play in crank shafts.
Keeps your engine in perfect alignment.
Makes your lights and ignition like new.
Old Fords crank like when they left the factory.
Put on new cars prevents connecting rod troubles and you
will never have starting trouble.
Initialled at a nominal cost.
This is not a cheap trashy accessory so often found on the
market. Everyone guaranteed to start your car without spinning
no matter in what condition.
This is worth investigating.
Price installed only $5.00
Real live agents can secure stute or county rights by writing
MEARL L. WALKER
EOX 34 WESLACO TEXAS
WOOD & DODD
INSURANCE
EVERY KIND
First Door North First Not’l Book
Phone 100
Brownsville Warehouse &
Storage Company
25.000 SQUARE FEET FLOOR
SPACE TO RENT
WE STORE ANYTHING
PHob« 450 Rro«rB«vi!le. T«sa»
Classified Ads Bring Good Results
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Wheeler, Fannie. The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 180, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 3, 1923, newspaper, January 3, 1923; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1378175/m1/4/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .